January: Snowboarding landed more people in the hospital in January, with virtually no accidents during the summer months in the US.

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February: More hospital visits related to snow removal occurred in February, higher than any other winter month.

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March: Exercise equipment was linked to hospital visits throughout the year, but the biggest spike was in March, followed by September.

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April: Outdoor track season in high schools gets underway in the spring, and in April 2014, the sport sent an estimated 6,522 people to the hospital.

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May: As baseball season heats up, the number of hospital visits related to the sport jumps up to 26,568 before declining the rest of the year.

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June: Beach chairs are related to a surprisingly high number of accidents (an estimated 1,231) in June, compared to the rest of the year.

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July: The time around the Fourth of July is filled with excitement and a whole bunch of amateur fireworks. Those displays send an unusually large number of people to the emergency room compared to the rest of the year, with just a small uptick again around New Year's Eve.

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August: elevator-related emergency room visits hit an all-year high in August based on the 2014 data.

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September: Accidents related to football sent the most people to the emergency room in September, followed closely by October, winding down as playoffs get underway.

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October: Relatedly, cheerleading accidents hit an all-year high in the middle of football season with an estimated 6,881 emergency room visits happening in October 2014.

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November: Oddly, daywear (the clothes we wear every day) was connected to a number of hospital visits throughout the year, hitting its peak in November with an estimated 5,773 accidents.

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December: To finish out the calendar year, ice hockey was linked to an abnormally high number of emergency room visits in December, around the middle of the ice hockey season.